Tag Archive for: 10’s

Android Circuit: New Galaxy S11 Leak, Nokia 8.2 Pops Up, Galaxy Note 10’s Exciting Features – Forbes

Android Circuit: New Galaxy S11 Leak, Nokia 8.2 Pops Up, Galaxy Note 10’s Exciting Features  Forbes

This week’s Android Circuit includes the new Galaxy Note 10 camera, a faster feature for the Galaxy S11, a faster Android gaming phone, Huawei’s Folding Mate …

“android security news” – read more

Microsoft to begin SHA-1 crypto shutoff with Windows 10’s summer upgrade

Microsoft last week outlined the timetable it will use to drop browser support for sites that secure traffic with SHA-1 certificates, part of an Internet-wide plan to rid the Internet of the weaker encryption.

With the delivery of the Windows 10 Anniversary Update — slated to ship sometime this summer — both Internet Explorer (IE) and Edge will stop displaying a lock icon for sites that reply on a SHA-1 certificate. That icon signals that the bits back and forth between browser and website are encrypted, and so not vulnerable to spying.

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Network World Security

Windows 10’s privacy policy is the new normal

Windows 10, in normal usage and typical configurations, will send quite a lot of information to Microsoft. Windows 8, in normal usage and typical configurations, will also send quite a lot of information to Microsoft. On the other side of the fence, OS X, in normal usage and typical configurations, will send some information to Apple. It’s hard to imagine a modern day operating system that doesn’t do this, at least to some extent.

For example, Windows, OS X, iOS, and Android all sport app stores. Buying from those app stores requires payment information, typically including a name, address, and credit card number. Those stores may have age-based restrictions, so might require a date of birth. Those purchases are, of course, tracked, to both ensure that developers get paid and that popularity lists can be constructed.

Different platforms have different twists on this. The iOS App Store, for example, can show you apps that are popular nearby; it must be recording some location data when purchases are made so it can make this correlation. Windows 10 goes in a different direction. It includes personalized “Picks for you” and can suggest particular apps, based on their similarity to apps that have been previously installed. This currently doesn’t seem very intelligent; it will sometimes recommend apps that are already installed.

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